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FIVE STEPS TO MANAGE THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY FOR B2B SUCCESS
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Executive Summary
Today’s customer is more educated and connected than ever before. With seemingly endless choices, and unfettered access to information from peers and other sources – standing out in the market is harder than ever. And lowering prices is not always a winning strategy. So, how can you attract and retain more customers in this new world of business? By focusing on creating extraordinary customer experiences.
Studies show that customers who experience consistently positive interactions with a company are likely to buy from that company again, and again. For example, a recent McKinsey report states that 70% of buying experiences are based on how the customer feels they are being treated. And, 55% of customers would pay extra to companies to guarantee better service, according to Defaqto Research. Conversely, a customer is 4 times more likely to defect to a competitor if the problem is service-related than it is price or product-related(1).
So, how can you get started building a customer-centric organization that consistently creates extraordinary customer relationships? While this is no simple task, the following are five solid steps any organization can take towards aligning their internal operations with the true customer lifecycle. They are:
• Mapping the Customer Journey• Identifying and Addressing Gaps in the Customer Journey• Creating a Total Customer View• Automating Processes to Better Align with the Customer• Creating a Cycle of Analysis and Adjustment
These five steps can serve as the building blocks of any customer focused business transformation. In the following pages, we will address each step in more detail.
Executive Summary
Step 1: Map the Customer Journey
Step 2: Find the Gaps, Please
Step 3: Create a Total Customer View
Step 4: Build Bridges with Automated Processes
Step 5: Analyze and Optimize
CRM is Not a Single Product or System
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Step 1: Map the Customer Journey
The concept of the “customer journey” as it pertains to creating exceptional customer
experiences is nothing new. After all, how can we build a business without some
understanding of the interaction between our products and services the customers who
purchase them? However, until recently, many organizations have generated customer
journey maps that are primarily “inward focused” – meaning, they were heavily skewed
towards how the company perceives the customer journey.
Today, in a world where the customer is in far greater control of how and when they buy, we
need to visualize journey maps that stem from the customers’ perspectives. So, while we
may have an “ideal” buying process from a company perspective – performing a customer-
focused journey mapping exercise can help discover how customers truly go about the
buying decision process.
When creating a customer journey map, it is important to consider not just how customers go
through the process of purchasing and receiving goods – but rather starting the mapping well
before that phase. Think about the awareness factor: how potential and existing customers
find your products, and how they begin to align their needs with your offerings. Conversely,
it is important to consider not only how customers purchase, but how they typically
receive products and services – taking into consideration the level of product or contextual
knowledge needed to be successful with the product or service. After all, the goal is to build
life-long, profitable relationships that are mutually beneficial.
It may or may not be necessary to involve actual customers in these sessions. But, in order
to get a truly inclusive and honest view of the customer journey – taking time and conducting
surveys, holding customer interviews, and other activities to capture the voice of the
customer can provide key insights in building a journey map.
STAFFING A CUSTOMER JOURNEY MAPPING SESSION
While customer journey mapping sessions do not actively include
customers, it is important to properly staff from an internal
perspective. All too often, mapping sessions can be “over staffed”
by executives: those with the most distance between their daily
activities and the customer experience. While it is important to have
both executive input and sponsorship – making sure employees with
a more daily grasp on customer interactions are involved. In short, it
is important to make sure the attendees selected fully represent the
voice of the customer.
Also, often only marketing and sales and customer support
executives are involved in formulating the customer journey map.
Instead, it is important to think more broadly. Are there individuals
or departments involved in post-sales, non-support roles that
touch the customer? These may include: product delivery, training,
accounting/billing, and other operations.
So, if the mapping session involves more “hands on” employees that
face the customer, and more departments than just marketing, sales
and support, the likelihood of a more accurate customer journey
map increases. And after all, the point of the exercise is getting
closer to the customer to enhance every interaction they have with
the organization.
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AVOIDING THE “CONSENSUS CONUNDRUM”
While many business-to-consumer (B2C) customer journey models
focus on the experience of an individual, typically B2B buying cycles
involve more than one decision-maker. However, many traditional
B2B sales management tools lack the flexibility to understand and
incorporate the wider group of people truly involved in closing, and
delivering upon, a successful sales opportunity.
So, when building out your models and architecting the tools to
meet the kinds of “gaps” in the customer journey – consider the
variety of individuals in a typical deal, and what it takes to gain
consensus among them to move forward in a successful manner.
This may mean pulling in a financial decision-maker to insure the
deal in question will be funded to success. Or, maybe IT and line of
business need to be in agreement in order to move forward. Either
way, it is important to use flexible technology that can include, track
and manage the expectations of multiple individuals as your sales
team acts as a guide towards driving consensus.
After all, when the right parties agree before the deal is closed –
the chances of repeat business, and more profitable long-term
relationships improve.
Step 2: Find the Gaps, Please
Once you’ve created a customer journey map that stems from the customer perspective,
now is the time to start aligning how the customer thinks, with how the organization is
structured. While performing this alignment, certain “gaps” may be uncovered – areas where
the customers’ expectations differ from how the organization is built to serve that phase of
the customer journey.
For example, in many business-to-business (B2B) scenarios, there can sometimes be a
significant time gap between the completed purchase and the actual receipt of that product
or service. This may happen because of poor post-sales communication with service delivery
teams. Or, sales may close a deal, but not properly insure the customer has included the right
stakeholders throughout the deal and contract process – thus leading to potential delays in
the collection of revenues.
To illustrate, imagine one individual at a large legal firm changes the default courier service for
transporting legal documents. If this is done without informing the right people: receptionists,
other lawyers, the document archivists, notaries, etc. – they may simply not know to call
or use this new service. And if the technology required to be successful is not installed
– an electronic code reader for instance – the courier company may not even be able to
commence business. Again, aligning along the customer journey means more than simply
optimizing the sales process.
By first creating an “outside in” view from the customer’s perspective, then aligning that
with existing internal processes, it becomes easier to find these gaps. And, it can be easier
to solve these problems once it is clear that any changes will have definitive effects on the
customer experience.
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Step 3: Create a Total Customer View
One of the obstacles to creating extraordinary customer relationships is the sheer inability
for organizations to generate a single, unified customer view. And, this is a prevalent issue.
Recent surveys have shown that three out of four companies lack a complete view of the
customer across touch points.
The reason for this lack of unified customer view across the organization is not
surprising. Typically, different departments utilize different software tools, data sources
and repositories to manage their portion of the customer lifecycle. While these tools are
critical – the result is that the data created and used in these systems simply stays in these
systems. Other departments either never get access to this data, or get it in a format or at a
time that does not help them when dealing directly with a customer.
For example, B2B sales teams typically receive leads from a marketing automation system.
But often they may only receive the name, company and contact information of a lead –
without a strong background of how that prospect passed through the “awareness” phase
of their journey. This puts the sales rep at a disadvantage. Further along the journey, a
customer support personnel or individuals providing training may not have access to the
rich information gathered by the sales team – which could help streamline product delivery,
training, etc.
In short, a complete and inclusive view of the customer – shared by every customer-facing
employee – can provide critical insights along the entire customer journey. However, if the
data generated in departmental systems simply stays in those systems – the value cannot
be realized.
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Step 4: Build Bridges with Automated Processes
While a centralized view of customer data goes a long way in helping create a business
aligned with the customer journey, data is just one part of the solution. Access to the right
data is critical, but just as important is creating well-defined frameworks for aiding customers
along their journey. This means defining and deploying solid process automation for both
customers and the internal employees who can help them along the journey.
It is important to understand that a customer process may span multiple touch points
(such as mobile, web, email, etc.) and touch multiple internal systems (a billing system,
e-commerce platform, an order management system, just to name a few). When modeling
these processes, insure that the data and identity of the customer can be retained as they
jump from touch point-to-touch point and from one stage in the journey to the next.
Again, the key is to think beyond the silos of departments and individual technology systems.
Applying a wider perspective when mapping and automating the customer journey enables
organizations to gather more information and insights, while also providing a more consistent
and satisfying experience to customers each time they engage.
SIMPLIFYING COMPLEX WORKFLOWS
While automating multi-step, multi-channel processes can
seem a daunting task, there are ways to alleviate some of the
potential headaches. One way is to centralize the management
of customer-facing processes inside the CRM system. This way,
there is one core process flow. Many data sources may feed into
this managed process, but creating, maintaining, and monitoring
core processes becomes much easier when they are based out of
a single core system.
So, when automating out of the CRM, make sure that the system
can provide the following to make the task of multiple process
automation even easier:
• Visual Process Designer: Building complex workflows is always
easier when you have a visual tool that helps model and test
process flows.
• Support for Multi-Step and Parallel Processes: Systems
should be flexible enough to support multiple paths towards
completing a phase in the customer journey.
• Mobile Support: In addition to pushing approval and other alerts
to mobile devices, modern process automation tools must
support a total mobile experience.
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Step 5: Analyze and Optimize
Creating a central data repository and developing more inclusive processes is just the
beginning. That is because the customer journey is always changing, and the ability
to differentiate through exceptional service depends on being able to quickly address
those changes.
If you are creating a truly holistic view of the customer – that data can provide insights into
how customers prefer to engage, and how the organization can meet customer needs. Also,
if the data is already centralized, collecting and analyzing that data is a far easier and less
time consuming task.
Also, creating an overarching strategy towards customer processes makes incremental
changes even easier. When a process spans multiple departments, but is contained in one
master process flow – tweaking the model to best serve the customer can be an easier
task. It is easier to analyze fewer, though more exhaustive processes, and find areas for
improvement, than scrutinizing dozens of micro-processes that only live inside a partial stage
of the customer journey.
Again, this is an ongoing process – one that is never truly finished. By continuing to ask
customers for feedback, and using that feedback towards improving the processes and
systems that serve the customer – your organization can align with the customer journey and
differentiate in the market.
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Conclusions
Making a major business transformation is never easy. However, there are ways to better manage the process of establishing a more customer-centric culture that focuses on creating extraordinary customer relationships. By following the above five steps, organizations of any size can get a head start in this transition.
Note that these steps are not necessarily meant to be followed in order, and many can
and should overlap. And while the right technology foundation is necessary to support the
transition, technology alone is not enough. Aligning the entire team with a singular goal –
extraordinary customer relationships – and managing the cultural and behavioral changes
needed to meet that goal, is what’s required to make the transition complete.
PUTTING THE “i” IN CRM - FIVE STEPS TO MANAGE THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY FOR B2B SUCCESS
Sources:
1. http://www.adlibsoftware.com/blog/2013/August/we-treat-every-customer-as-if-they-are-our-only-customer.aspx
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